3, 2, 1 ¡A ganar!

3, 2, 1 ¡A ganar! (English:3, 2, 1 ¡To win!) was an Argentine television program, hosted by Alejandro "Marley" Wiebe from 1 February until November 26, 2010 on Telefe.[1] The day of its debut scored a rating of 13.9 points.[2]

3, 2, 1 ¡A ganar!
Created byNanuk Producciones
On TV - Llorente & Villaruel Contenidos
Telefe Contenidos
Presented byAlejandro "Marley" Wiebe
Osvaldo Príncipi
Carla Bonfante
Leandro Alimonti
Noelia Marzol
StarringNazareno Móttola
Marcos "Bicho" Gómez
Country of originArgentina
No. of seasonsSpanish language: 1
No. of episodes211
Production
Executive producer(s)Pablo Alonso
Federico Hoffmann
Producer(s)Marcos Gorban
Running time60 minutes (Monday to thursday)
120 minutes (Friday)
Release
Original networkTelefe
First shown inArgentina
Original release2 January (2010-01-02) 
26 November 2010 (2010-11-26)
External links
Website

Mechanical program

The program consists of several games where participants must prove their physical prowess and strategy skills. Telephone games, where people participate for various prizes, like cheese rations and bottles of wine, are also available. The main prize of the program was a trip to the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Once the World Cup started, the biggest prize was a trip to Orlando, Florida, United States.

Between 23 August and 30 August 2010, it was transmitted from the resort town of Las Leñas in Mendoza, with snow games due to the winter season.

3, 2 , 1 ¡A ganar! ended on November 26, 2010, with 211 episodes.

Cast

  • Host: Alejandro "Marley" Wiebe
  • Locution: Osvaldo Príncipi and Carla Bonfante
  • Assistant games: Leandro Alimonti and Noelia Marzol
  • Comedians: Nazareno Móttola and Marcos "Bicho" Gómez
  • Address: Fernando Emiliozzi
  • Recurring characters: Mauricio Trech, Fernando Colombo and Julián Cavero
gollark: It's mildly annoying that node.js doesn't seem to have a module to read passwords from stdin (without, you know, displaying them like it would for other text prompt things).
gollark: You know, when I read the challenge description I assumed it meant "interpreter program in highish-level language", not "incomprehensible interpreter for Windows".
gollark: But not the second one, that's evil and heresy.
gollark: I see.
gollark: windows bad???

References

  1. "Marley: delirante y juguetón" (in Spanish). Ciudad.com. Archived from the original on February 2, 2010. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  2. "Día: lunes 1 de febrero del 2010" (in Spanish). IBOPE. Archived from the original on February 8, 2010. Retrieved February 1, 2010.


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